The World's Best Minesweepers Haven't Left Port -- Yet
Japan has the one capability the Hormuz coalition lacks most. The legal architecture exists. The existential case is overwhelming. The only variable is political will.
Japan has the one capability the Hormuz coalition lacks most. The legal architecture exists. The existential case is overwhelming. The only variable is political will.
Two days ago, this blog argued that Bessent held the line but the line was thinner. On Tuesday, Iran began laying mines in the Strait of Hormuz. On Wednesday, the IEA announced the largest emergency oil release in its history: 400 million barrels. Brent crude barely flinched, settling around $93. The containment failed. Not because Bessent’s tools were wrong, but because mines changed the physics of the problem. Why mines changed everything The market had been pricing a scenario: Hormuz reopens when the shooting stops. Trump says the war is “very complete.” Escorts arrive. Tankers resume. Oil falls. That was the trade on Monday, when the Nikkei bounced 2.88% and Brent dropped from $119 to $88. ...